Mexican Cinema Luminaries

Learn about the contribution of some of the most outstanding women in national cinematography.

Portrait of Mimi Derba (ca. 1925) by Estudio fotográfico HollywoodFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Mimí Derba

Mimi Derba was one of the great divas of revue in Mexico. When Mexican cinema was taking its first steps towards industrialization, she founded the production company Azteca Films together with the filmmaker Enrique Rosas and the revolutionary general Pablo González. 

Mimi Derba and María Conesa (ca. 1930) by Fotógrafo no identificadoFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

That same year, she produced, directed and starred in La Tigresa, thus becoming the first female film director in Mexico. Later, she resumed acting, having unforgettable appearances in some of the most important films in Mexican cinema.

Meche Barba in “Lola Casanova” (1948) by Luis Márquez RomayFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Matilde Landeta

Matilde Soto Landeta joined the Mexican cinema as a "script girl" in the 1930s and worked as an assistant to directors such as Emilio el Indio Fernández, Julio Bracho and Roberto Gavaldón. 

In a profession dominated by men, she had to create her own production company, TACMA, to direct her films: Lola Casanova (1948), La negra Angustias (1949) and Trotacalles (1951).

María Elena Marqués in "La negra angustias" (1949) by Luis Márquez RomayFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

She joined television and continued to work in films as a screenwriter; in 1957 she won an Ariel for the screenplay for El camino de la vida (Alfonso Corona Blake). She was only able to direct again until 1991, when she brought the film Nocturno a Rosario to the screen.

Janet Alcoriza in “Café Concordia” (1938) by Leonardo Jiménez EspinosaFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Jant Alcoriza

Janet Reisenfield made her debut in Mexican cinema in 1938, participating in a musical number in the film Una luz en mi camino (José Bohr) and the following year she obtained a role in the film Café Concordia (Alberto Gout). 

In Café Concordia she appeared in the credits as Raquel Rojas.

Janet Alcoriza in “Cuando viajan las estrellas” (1941) by Fotógrafo no identificadoFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Later, she stood out as a screenwriter and adapter in more than eighty films, including those by director Luis Buñuel: El gran calavera (1949) and La hija del engaño (1951).

Advertising photomontage of "Ladronzuela" (1949) by Rafael García JiménezFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Yolanda Vargas Dulche

She is the most famous comic book author in Mexico thanks to her famous Memín Pinguín and the popular Lágrimas y risas. For years, she was the most widely read Mexican writer with works that she adapted into film and television scripts such as: María Isabel, Yesenia and Rubí.

Cast of "Cinco rostros de mujer" (1946) by Luis Márquez RomayFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Vargas Dulche was part of the cinema union in the Authors and Adapters branch, she was a scriptwriter for films such as: Idilio, Ladronzuela y Cinco rostros de mujer, an Ariel-winning film in 1948.

Consuelo Velázquez (ca. 1945) by Juan GuzmánFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Consuelo Velázquez

Consuelo Velázquez was a great composer and pianist from Jalisco, famous for the international hit Bésame mucho

From a very young age, she showed enormous musical abilities and later moved to Mexico City to study for a music degree and become a concert pianist and music teacher. 

Consuelo Velázquez greets President López Portillo (1979) by Fotógrafo no identificadoFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

She was part of the National Symphony Orchestra and joined the Mexican cinema as a composer of many popular songs such as the funny Yo no fui, interpreted by Pedro Infante in the movie ¡A.T.M.! (Ismael Rodríguez, 1951).

Effect of the editing of "Distinto amanecer" (1943) by Gloria SchoemannFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Gloria Schoemann

Gloria Schoemann is, without a doubt, the most important film editor of the "golden age" of Mexican cinema, far surpassing the 15 male colleagues with whom she shared the profession, according to the union registry. 

Effect of the editing of "Distinto amanecer" (1943) by Gloria SchoemannFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

She entered the cinema in 1938 and was responsible for the assembly of more than two hundred films, including: María Candelaria (Emilio Fernández, 1943), Distinto amanecer (Julio Bracho, 1943), Dos tipos de cuidado (Ismael Rodríguez, 1953) and Macario (Roberto Gavaldón, 1959).

Dolores Camarillo with the team of production of "El gran Makakikus" (1944) by Rafael García JiménezFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Dolores Camarillo "Fraustita" 

Dolores Camarillo was an important supporting actress and film makeup artist, being one of the pioneers in this profession in Mexico, accumulating more than one hundred titles behind the camera between 1935 and 1980. 

Dolores Camarillo in “Ahí está el detalle” (1940) by Isaías CoronaFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

As an actress, she surpassed 120 films in this same period, also dabbling in the nascent television. One of his most memorable appearances was alongside Mario Moreno Cantinflas in Ahí está el detalle (Juan Bustillo Oro, 1940).

Scene from “Una carta de amor” (1943) by Fotógrafo no identificadoFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Antonia Cortés

Antonia Cortés worked in the Mexican cinema as Head of Costume since 1944. Even this department in the union was occupied, for the most part, by men, with only four women out of twelve professionals. 

Scene from “El globo de Cantolla” (1943) by Fotógrafo no identificadoFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Antonia was responsible for dressing the most important stars of our cinema and was responsible for dream outfits such as those made for Jorge Negrete and Gloria Marín in Una carta de amor (1943) or those made for Mapy Cortés and all the cast of  El globo de Cantolla (1943).

Still of “El imperio de Drácula” (1966) by Angelina AlanizFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

Angelina Alaniz

Little is known about this pioneer still photographer in Mexican cinema. In 1966, she became the first woman with this screen credit in El imperio de Drácula (Federico Curiel). 

At that time, there were two film unions in Mexico, the STPC and the STIC, but neither of them had women registered in the photography section. 

Stills of "El imperio de Drácula" (1966) by Angelina AlanizFundación Televisa Collection and Archive

In other words, women could not work as cinematographers, lighting designers, assistants or camera operators, nor as still photographers.

Credits: Story

Texts: Héctor Orozco.

Archive research: Gustavo Fuentes.

Virtual exhibition: Cecilia Absalón Huízar.

Digitization and image editing: Omar Espinoza.

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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